Below are a number of items with which you should be familiar after reading Chapter 23. Enter your answer in the blank.Note: You must enter NUMERIC VALUES, then click your mouse anywhere outside of the input box to check your answer.

Bishop Boussuet's Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Scripture:
1. proclaimed the doctrine of papal supremacy
2. traced the origin of governments to a social contract
3. asserted that kings ruled by divine right
4. claimed that the king was answerable to no one, not even to God.

Louis XIV:
1. established religious toleration in France
2. removed the disabilities imposed on Catholics
3. demonstrated a statesmanship that ensured the loyalty of all his subjects
4. contributed to industrial progress in rival Protestant countries by driving large numbers of Huguenots out of France.

To finance his projects, Tsar Peter the Great laid heaviest exactions upon:
1. peasants
2. the Church
3. the nobles
4. bankers and industrialists.

The Eurocentric world view of Peter the Great is most evident in his:
1. democratic reforms
2. abolition of serfdom
3. pacific relations with his western neighbors
4. military conquests.

The Clarendon Code:
1. was broken by French cryptographers during the War of the
Spanish Succession
2. penalized English Catholics and Protestant dissenters
3. prescribed the public behavior of the English aristocracy
4. was abolished by King Charles I.

John Locke, in his Two Treatises of Civil Government, declared that the right to life,
liberty, and property was derived from:
1. the law of nature
2. the Bible
3. custom
4. acts of the legislature

The "diplomatic revolution" of 1756:
1. brought a rapprochement between France and Austria
2. overthrew the Habsburg monarchy
3. created an international peace-keeping organization
4. pitted Prussia against Great Britain.

IDENTIFICATIONS?--Part BYou should also be able to identify the following people. Click to reveal the answer and a page number in your text for more information: